Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ah.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/138453
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dc.contributor英文系
dc.creator許立欣
dc.creatorHsu, Li-hsin
dc.date2021-05
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-04T07:22:07Z-
dc.date.available2022-01-04T07:22:07Z-
dc.date.issued2022-01-04T07:22:07Z-
dc.identifier.urihttp://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/138453-
dc.description.abstractThis chapter explores Chinatown as an ephemeral site of visual indeterminacy in the 1870s by looking at a number of Californian chinatown accounts in Helen Hunt Jackson`s "The Chinese Empire" (1878) and Mark Twain`s Roughing It (1872). Late-nineteenth-century Chinatown as an exhibitory locus of authentic Chinese-ness for Western tourists is paradoxically characterized by its mutability rather than realism. By examining the accounts of Jackson and Twain about the Chinese in the 1870s, the decade before the passing of the 1882 Chinses Exclusion Act, the paper rethinks the "virtual" existence of Chinatown, its contested nature as a "phantasmatic site" for Western projections and visual consumption, which manifests the potential realization of national transformation in the mythic Orient of the new West.
dc.format.extent308214 bytes-
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf-
dc.relationEphemeral Spectacles Exhibition Spaces and Museums, Amsterdam University Press, pp.191-217
dc.subjectCalifornian Chinatowns;Helen Hunt Jackson;Mark Twain;Virtuality;Oreintalist Discourse
dc.titleThe `Phantasmatic` Chinatown in Helen Hunt Jackson`s `The Chinese Empire` and Mark Twain`s Roughing It
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item.openairecristypehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18cf-
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